Qobuz Store wallpaper
Categories:
Cart 0

Your cart is empty

Anthony Coleman|Freakish

Freakish

Anthony Coleman

Available in
16-Bit/44.1 kHz Stereo

Unlimited Streaming

Listen to this album in high quality now on our apps

Start my trial period and start listening to this album

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Subscribe

Enjoy this album on Qobuz apps with your subscription

Digital Download

Purchase and download this album in a wide variety of formats depending on your needs.

In early 2009, Anthony Coleman recorded an album of Jelly Roll Morton compositions, reinterpreting early jazz in a manner guided by his own personal relationship with musical history. Back in the '90s, Coleman had traversed the turf of that tradition a bit more adventurously with his group the Selfhaters in performance at New York clubs like Roulette and the Knitting Factory. What made it onto their first album was a pair of eccentrically stylized exercises in morphological revision, as "The Mooche" and "You Don't Know What Love Is" became darker, weirder, and more enigmatic than the composers and original interpreters would ever have imagined or perhaps even condoned. Achievements of that nature, a longstanding alliance with John Zorn and the creation of notated compositions under the combined influences of Schoenberg, Webern, Feldman, Stravinsky, and Varèse have earned Coleman a reputation as an avant-garde "radical Jewish" musician. Freakish provides deeper clues and is strongly recommended for unbiased intelligent inquiry regarding who Coleman really is, what he's been studying all his life, and what he feels the need to accomplish or express.
African-American music from the dawn of the 20th century -- especially that of Scott Joplin and Jelly Roll Morton -- reinvented itself many years later, cropping up with protean persistence in the works of modern creative musicians like Muhal Richard Abrams, Anthony Braxton, and Henry Threadgill. For examples from these individuals, see the Braxton-Abrams duet album from 1976; the Air Trio's Air Lore of 1979, and the Braxton-Stewart Gillmor Duo's 14 Compositions (Traditional) 1996. Coleman's Freakish, by comparison, holds comparatively close to the traditional weave of Morton's magnificent oeuvre, employing just the right blend of poetic license and personal vision. As of 2009, it was the most straightforward, traditional, and easily digestible album in Coleman's entire discography, occupying a special niche within John Zorn's provocative Tzadik catalog. This little project would have delighted Coleman's childhood mentor Jaki Byard.
Regarding the title track, which the pianist interprets twice: Ferdinand Morton recorded two takes of "Freakish" for the Victor label in Chicago on July 8, 1929. Morton's title refers to unconventional rhythmic patterns, which periodically assert themselves by convoluting the flow in ways that bring to mind Bix Beiderbecke's "In a Mist" and Coleman Hawkins' "Queer Notions." Exercising a breathtaking dramatic command comparable to that of Martial Solal, Coleman summons an entire tradition of deliberately de-centered navigation by expanding and contracting pace and flow to emphasize each riffle and eddy in the currents of Morton's enduring melodies. The selections span Jelly's entire recording career, as "King Porter Stomp" (July 1923) was one of his first records and "Mama's Got a Baby" (January 1940) was among the very last. Coleman's readings of "The Crave," "The Pearls," "Frog-I-More," and "Mr. Jelly Lord" are so intelligently and creatively delivered that anyone with the slightest interest in 20th century music really ought to consider making time for this recital.

© arwulf arwulf /TiVo

More info

Freakish

Anthony Coleman

launch qobuz app I already downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS Open

download qobuz app I have not downloaded Qobuz for Windows / MacOS yet Download the Qobuz app

You are currently listening to samples.

Listen to over 100 million songs with an unlimited streaming plan.

Listen to this playlist and more than 100 million songs with our unlimited streaming plans.

From 12,49€/month

1
Freakish
00:03:40

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

2
Fickle Fay Creep (Soap Suds)
00:05:07

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

3
Buffalo Blues (Mr. Joe)
00:03:40

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

4
Frances (Fat Frances)
00:03:22

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

5
Jelly Lord
00:04:02

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

6
Mamanita
00:04:43

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

7
Pretty Lil
00:03:57

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

8
The Pearls
00:06:03

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

9
Frog-I-More
00:05:22

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

10
The Crave
00:03:29

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

11
Mama's Got A Baby
00:04:05

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

12
Freakish (Version Two)
00:04:21

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

13
King Porter Stomp
00:06:25

Jelly Roll Morton, Composer - Anthony Coleman, MainArtist

2009 Tzadik 2009 Tzadik

Albumbeschreibung

In early 2009, Anthony Coleman recorded an album of Jelly Roll Morton compositions, reinterpreting early jazz in a manner guided by his own personal relationship with musical history. Back in the '90s, Coleman had traversed the turf of that tradition a bit more adventurously with his group the Selfhaters in performance at New York clubs like Roulette and the Knitting Factory. What made it onto their first album was a pair of eccentrically stylized exercises in morphological revision, as "The Mooche" and "You Don't Know What Love Is" became darker, weirder, and more enigmatic than the composers and original interpreters would ever have imagined or perhaps even condoned. Achievements of that nature, a longstanding alliance with John Zorn and the creation of notated compositions under the combined influences of Schoenberg, Webern, Feldman, Stravinsky, and Varèse have earned Coleman a reputation as an avant-garde "radical Jewish" musician. Freakish provides deeper clues and is strongly recommended for unbiased intelligent inquiry regarding who Coleman really is, what he's been studying all his life, and what he feels the need to accomplish or express.
African-American music from the dawn of the 20th century -- especially that of Scott Joplin and Jelly Roll Morton -- reinvented itself many years later, cropping up with protean persistence in the works of modern creative musicians like Muhal Richard Abrams, Anthony Braxton, and Henry Threadgill. For examples from these individuals, see the Braxton-Abrams duet album from 1976; the Air Trio's Air Lore of 1979, and the Braxton-Stewart Gillmor Duo's 14 Compositions (Traditional) 1996. Coleman's Freakish, by comparison, holds comparatively close to the traditional weave of Morton's magnificent oeuvre, employing just the right blend of poetic license and personal vision. As of 2009, it was the most straightforward, traditional, and easily digestible album in Coleman's entire discography, occupying a special niche within John Zorn's provocative Tzadik catalog. This little project would have delighted Coleman's childhood mentor Jaki Byard.
Regarding the title track, which the pianist interprets twice: Ferdinand Morton recorded two takes of "Freakish" for the Victor label in Chicago on July 8, 1929. Morton's title refers to unconventional rhythmic patterns, which periodically assert themselves by convoluting the flow in ways that bring to mind Bix Beiderbecke's "In a Mist" and Coleman Hawkins' "Queer Notions." Exercising a breathtaking dramatic command comparable to that of Martial Solal, Coleman summons an entire tradition of deliberately de-centered navigation by expanding and contracting pace and flow to emphasize each riffle and eddy in the currents of Morton's enduring melodies. The selections span Jelly's entire recording career, as "King Porter Stomp" (July 1923) was one of his first records and "Mama's Got a Baby" (January 1940) was among the very last. Coleman's readings of "The Crave," "The Pearls," "Frog-I-More," and "Mr. Jelly Lord" are so intelligently and creatively delivered that anyone with the slightest interest in 20th century music really ought to consider making time for this recital.

© arwulf arwulf /TiVo

About the album

Improve album information

Qobuz logo Why buy on Qobuz...

On sale now...

Getz/Gilberto

Stan Getz

Getz/Gilberto Stan Getz

Moanin'

Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Moanin' Art Blakey & The Jazz Messengers

Blue Train

John Coltrane

Blue Train John Coltrane

Live 1978 - 1992

Dire Straits

Live 1978 - 1992 Dire Straits
More on Qobuz
By Anthony Coleman

Shmutsige Magnaten

Anthony Coleman

Shmutsige Magnaten Anthony Coleman

Sephardic Tinge

Anthony Coleman

Sephardic Tinge Anthony Coleman

Anthony Coleman: You

Anthony Coleman

Anthony Coleman: You Anthony Coleman

Selfhaters

Anthony Coleman

Selfhaters Anthony Coleman

Arcades

Anthony Coleman

Arcades Anthony Coleman

Playlists

You may also like...

The Köln Concert (Live at the Opera, Köln, 1975)

Keith Jarrett

Orchestras

Bill Frisell

Orchestras Bill Frisell

We Get Requests

Oscar Peterson

We Get Requests Oscar Peterson

Kind Of Blue

Miles Davis

Kind Of Blue Miles Davis

The Carnegie Hall Concert

Alice Coltrane

The Carnegie Hall Concert Alice Coltrane